Yearly Archives: 2012

Richmond Grove sells historic riesling

John Vickery, joined Leo Buring as winemaker in 1955, then made Richmond Grove riesling in the former Buring winery, Chateau Leonay, from 1994

An old wine-drinking mate, Mike Bond, recently told me about a stash of glorious old rieslings on sale at Richmond Grove. The Barossa winery makes some of Australia’s finest rieslings – much loved at Chateau Shanahan as they’re comparatively cheap and drink beautifully for many years. We’re currently enjoying Richmond Grove Watervale rieslings 1999 and 2002, purchased at less than $10 a bottle on release.

Richmond Grove’s website currently offers Watervale rieslings from1996 to 2011 (only the 2001 is missing), Barossa riesling 2000 and Eden Valley riesling 2002. It’s a distinguished line up and a rare opportunity to buy perfectly cellared white direct from the maker.

Though Richmond Grove made its first rieslings only in 1994, their pedigree stretches back to the earliest days of fine riesling production in Australia. The rieslings flow from the distinct winemaking traditions of Orlando and Leo Buring – represented by winemakers John Vickery, Phil Laffer and Bernard Hickin.

But the story goes back even further to Ray Kidd, former head of Lindemans, Leo Buring (1876–1961), Buring’s Chateau Leonay winery, on the outskirts of Tanunda in the Barossa Valley, and the Florita vineyard, located at Watervale in the southern Clare Valley.

In the 1940s wine merchant Leo Buring purchased the Florita site at Watervale, towards the southern end of South Australia’s Clare Valley. He planted the sherry varieties, pedro ximenez and palomino, and, believes winemaker John Vickery, a little crouchen (known then as Clare riesling), trebbiano and shiraz – but not riesling.

After graduating from Roseworthy wine college, Vickery joined the ageing Leo Buring as winemaker at Chateau Leonay. He made both table and fortified wines and recalls “a terrific flor sherry solera” Buring had established using flor yeast cultures pirated from Spain’s Xerez region.

Buring sold the wine, grown on the Florita vineyard, under the Leo Buring Florita Fino label – probably the first wine to bear the vineyard name.

Buring died in 1961 and in 1962 Lindemans purchased the Buring business, retaining John Vickery as winemaker.

By now table wine consumption in Australia was on the move, sparked by a string of so-called “pearl” style light, sparkling table wines, including Orlando Barossa Pearl and Leo Buring Rhinegold, and the arrival of crisp, fruity whites, also pioneered by Colin Gramp at Orlando in the fifties.

To take on Orlando in the booming riesling market, Lindeman head, Ray Kidd, replanted the 32-hectare Florita vineyard almost entirely to riesling – leaving about one hectare of crouchen as the only other variety.

By the 1963 vintage, with new protective winemaking equipment in place at Leonay, Vickery was poised to make the great Leo Buring rieslings – many from the Florita vineyard – that earned 50 trophies and 400 gold medals by 1997. Under Kidd, Lindemans re-released many of these as magnificent aged wines in the late seventies and early eighties.

In 1986, Philip Morris trimmed Lindemans down for sale, selling the prized Florita vineyard to the Barry family. Vickery and winemaking boss, Phil Laffer, later parted with Lindemans following its acquisition by Southcorp.

Laffer joined Orlando as head winemaker. Orlando purchased Chateau Leonay, made it the headquarters of Richmond Grove (formerly of the Hunter Valley) and installed Vickery as winemaker.

From 1994 Vickery returned to riesling making, sourcing fruit for Richmond Grove Watervale from his much-loved Florita vineyard. The wheel had turned full circle. He also produced a Barossa riesling, a blend of material from the Eden Valley (part of the Barossa zone) and Jacob’s Creek, on the southern Barossa Valley floor.

Vickery’s early work with Lindemans and Leo Buring shaped modern Australian riesling making. But he had more to give. In 1997 he hosted riesling tastings that hastened the biggest revolution ever in Australian winemaking – the adoption of screw caps.

In separate events for the trade and wine media, Vickery presented decades of glorious old rieslings he’d created. But cork had taken its toll, Vickery noted, tainting wine with the musty flavours of trichloroanisole or failing as a barrier against air. Vickery told us he’d opened up to six bottles of some older wines to find one good one. He urged the industry to return to the screw cap.

Following the tastings, Richmond Grove agreed to supply Coles-owned Vintage Cellars 1,000 dozen each of Watervale and Barossa riesling from the coming 1998 vintage under screw caps.  The two companies shared the risk of re-introducing a time-proven seal that had, however, been completely rejected by consumers twenty years earlier. (At the time, I headed Coles Myer Liquor Group’s tasting panel and marketing communications and creative department).

But this time drinkers believed the winemakers. Vintage Cellars sold its stock quickly. And Richmond Grove found itself overwhelmed with demand from other retailers. Two vintages later, a group of Clare riesling makers, including Richmond Grove, launched a screw-cap campaign. And now more than 80 per cent of wine sold in Australia wears the cap.

Some of the older rieslings offered by Richmond Grove predate the screw cap. But winemaker Bernard Hickin says they eliminate low-fill cork stock. And, in any event, there’s plenty of screw-cap sealed stock to chose from, including those magnificent 1999 and 2002 Watervales. Hickin says they cellar the wine in excellent conditions, always under 18 degrees, but generally around 15 to 16 degrees. This is a unique buying opportunity.

Sequel
John Vickery retired and still lives in the Barossa Valley. Phil Laffer, now in his early seventies, plays an international winemaking role for Pernod Ricard, Richmond Grove’s parent company. Bernard Hickin took over from Laffer, heading Pernod Richard’s Australian winemaking (Jacob’s Creek and Richmond Grove included). Rebecca Richardson replaced Hickin as group white wine maker. And Don “Mr Aromatics” Young took charge of the group’s aromatic white wines, including Richmond Grove riesling.

Richmond Grove sourced riesling grapes from the Barry family’s Florita Vineyard from 1994 to 1998 inclusive, then moved onto to other contract growers in this prime Clare Valley sub-region. Barossa Riesling proved difficult to sell. Richmond Grove discontinued its production after the 2000 vintage – this magnificent wine was still available at cellar door when I wrote this article.

Why drink old riesling
We drink aged riesling for the same reason we drink young riesling – it’s delicious, and interesting. Over time the colour changes from a pale lemon colour through pale and then deep gold – often green tinted. As young wines they offer pure, shimmering lemon or lime-like fruitiness and racy acidity, in some cases quite austere. As the colour deepens slowly with age, the aroma takes on a honeyed or toasty character, adding complexity to the still-intact varietal fruit. The palate becomes more mellow and richer, reflecting the aroma. It’s a thrilling combination of age with freshness, reliably captured under screw cap, less reliably with cork.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 27 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Zeppelin, Penfolds, Jim Barry and Annie’s Lane

Zeppelin Shiraz 2010 $16–$20
Angaston foothills, Barossa Valley, South Australia
Winemaker Kym Teusner established Teusner Wines in 2001, sourcing grapes from very old, low-yielding grenache vines threatened by low grape prices. Teusner succeeded, proving the vines to be commercially viable. In the ensuing decade Teusner expanded the range of Barossa vineyards he sourced from, selling the wines under his now highly regarded Teusner label. More recently he introduced the Zeppelin label. Widely distributed by McWilliams, the two Zeppelins reviewed today offer wonderful Barossa flavour at low prices. Teusner says the wines come from 60-to-80-year-old vines. The shiraz will certainly appeal more broadly than the grenache. Its lovely aroma, full, supple, ripe palate and gentle tannins are simply delicious. The wine comes from an old shiraz vineyard near Angaston in the eastern Barossa.

Zeppelin Grenache 2010 $16–$20
Northern Barossa Valley, South Australia
This is comparable in quality to Zeppelin shiraz, our wine of the day. My only caveat, based on years of group tasting, including a recent one featuring both wines, is that people tend to love or hate grenache. And it seldom tops a tasting alongside shiraz. It’s normally more alcoholic than shiraz as it requires longer on vine to ripen; and the colour is usually paler. However, if you like grenache, Zeppelin is a powerful expression of the Barossa style, sourced from 80-year-old vines located between Greenock and Ebenezer. It sometimes presents musk-like for confection-like flavours. But Zeppelin is more earthy and savoury with attractive spicy notes.

Penfolds Bin 150 Marananga Shiraz 2009 $57–$75
Marananga, Western Barossa Valley, South Australia
Marananga, towards the western side of the Barossa, produces powerful shiraz, often making the grade for Grange. The quality of shiraz from the area prompted large-scale vineyard expansion there in the nineties, opening the way for Penfolds to produce a sub-regional wine, Bin 150, in 2008. The second vintage, matured in both French and American oak, is a powerful but graceful Barossa shiraz. The oak and fruit work beautifully together, the fruit always at the centre but enriched by the oak flavour and tannins.

Penfolds Bin 51 Riesling 2011 $23.75–$33
Eden Valley, South Australia
The Eden Valley forms the elevated, eastern boundary of the Barossa region. Significantly cooler than the Barossa floor and the Clare Valley (located to the north on the same ranges), Eden at its best produces lean, tightly structured, intensely flavoured rieslings capable of cellaring for decades. The cool 2011 exacerbates that lean, tight structure. But it also means even more intense fruit flavours in this dry, 11-per-cent alcohol wine. It’s a classy wine offering very good cellaring potential. Watch for the retail discounts, around $10 a bottle below recommended price.

Jim Barry Watervale Riesling 2012 $15.20–$19
Florita vineyard, Watervale, Clare Valley, South Australia
The first 2012 white on the tasting bench sets a cracking pace, and points to an excellent riesling vintage. From the former Leo Buring Florita vineyard (purchased from Lindemans by the Barry family in 1986) the new release hits the palate with impressive lime-like briskness. Dry as a plank, but intensely fruity, it teases and satisfies the palate at the same time. The high acid and fine, intense, lime-like fruit flavour make it an excellent oyster wine. But it’ll mellow and flesh out with cellaring, providing drinking pleasure in various guises for a decade or more.

Annie’s Lane Riesling 2012 $13.30–$21
Clare Valley, South Australia
Annie’s Lane, part of Treasury Wine Estates (spun out of Foster’s), provides notably fuller, softer drinking than Jim Barry’s riesling – variations on the Clare style. Winemaker Alex Mackenzie’s press release offers no information about grape sourcing, winemaking or technical details on the wine. But it’s slightly deeper coloured than the Jim Barry wine, leaning more to floral than lime aroma. The palate reflects the aroma, beginning floral then leaning to roundness and a fresh, lemony finish – but without the jaw-dropping freshness of the comparably priced Barry wine.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 27 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Lion devours Little Creatures

Lion, the Australasian arm of Japan’s Kirin Brewery, is to acquire ASX-listed Little World Beverages – owner of Little Creatures and White Rabbit beers and Pipsqueak cider. Lion took a 20 per cent stake when the business was founded in 2000 and currently holds 36.3 per cent.

And what a juicy little morsel it is for Lion to swallow. In its 2011 annual report, Little World Beverage’s noted 24.1 per cent growth in revenue to $70 million, 35.6 per cent increase in net profit to $9.2 million and a 41 per cent increase in operating cash flows.

The takeover offer of $5.30 a share – endorsed by LWB’s board (which controls 35 per cent of shares on issue) – saw the share price rocket from $3.79 on 15 June to $5.16 on 18 June, the day the takeover was announced.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 27 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Penfolds

Penfolds Bin 23 Adelaide Hills Pinot Noir 2011 $32–$40
What a beautiful, satisfying pinot this is, albeit a little off the Penfolds beaten path. The teasing, stalky character suggests whole-bunch fermentation – mainstream for pinot makers. But the chewy, tough-edged tannins seemed a world away from the highly polished Penfolds style. The cloudiness, too, zigged away from the normal pristine purity. An email to winemaker Peter Gago drew the immediate response, “The P/Noirs made at Magill are all cold-soaked, naturally fermented, and spend their maturation in barrique on lees … almost always bottled unfiltered, never fined. The cost of this ‘hands-off’, flavour-retentive approach is occasional turbidity”.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 24 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Penfolds, Swinging Bridge, Evans and Tate and Mount Langi Ghiran

Penfolds Thomas Hyland Cool Climate Chardonnay 2011 $15.25–$24
Predominantly Adelaide Hills, South Australia
We could call Thomas Hyland the forgotten Penfolds range – sitting quietly in the shade of the much-hyped bin and icon wines. The chardonnay debuted in 2001, an offshoot of the “white Grange” project that delivered the flagship Yattarna and Adelaide Hills Reserve Bin chardonnays. The style evolved with the times, and in the 2011 vintage we enjoy a trim, taut wine that looks a steal when the big retailers discount it below $20 ($15.35 at Dan Murphy as I write). At a modest 12 per cent alcohol, it delivers the acid backbone and lemon and grapefruit varietal flavour of the cool vintage. Fermentation and maturation in French oak barrels added nutty and spicy flavours and a smooth, rich texture to support the fruit.

Swinging Bridge Shiraz 2010 $19
Canowindra, NSW
On a recent visit to Canberra, winemaker Tom Ward presented eight consecutive vintages – 2004 to 2011 – of the shiraz he makes from the family’s Canowindra vineyard. While the flavour of the wines reflected seasonal weather variations, they shared a common thread: red-berry and spice flavours and medium body. It’s a delicious, easy-drinking combination. We enjoyed the slightly firmer 2010 vintage (current release), wedged in between the fleshier 2009 and the notably lighter, peppery, utterly delicious 2011 vintage (not yet released). Current releases are available for tasting at the cellar door – in the restored Finn’s Story, Gaskill Street Canowindra.

Swinging Bridge Reserve Shiraz 2010 $45
Canowindra, NSW
Swinging Bridge Reserve Shiraz retains the medium bodied style of the standard shiraz – but rises above it with deep, sweet, juicy, spicy fruit flavour, set in layers of firm, ripe tannins. The extra dimension the wine offers comes partly from fruit selection in the vineyard, and partly from maturation in new oak, which adds to both the flavour and texture. While the wine’s powerful and concentrated, it’s elegantly structured, with a moderate alcohol level of 13 per cent.

Evans and Tate Redbank Cabernet Sauvignon 2009 $38
Margaret River, Western Australi
Evans and Tate Redbank rated top in a recent tasting of cabernet and related varieties from St Emillion (France), Mornington Peninsula, Macedon, McLaren Vale, Clare Valley, Frankland River and Margaret River. Second runner, Balnaves of Coonawarra The Tally Reserve 2009, may ultimately be the better wine. It just needs extended cellaring. But Redbank seduces now with its sweet perfume and elegant, supple, fine palate – a really beautiful expression of cabernet sauvignon.

Mount Langi Ghiran Cliff Edge Shiraz 2009 $22.80–$30
Mount Langi Ghiran vineyard, Grampians, Victoria
This is the second vintage of Mount Langi Ghiran’s popular Cliff Edge shiraz sourced entirely from estate-grown fruit, some of it from the estate’s oldest vines. Like the 2008 before it – perhaps more so – the 2009 is as sexy as shiraz gets at the price – beautifully, sweetly aromatic with a vibrant, fruity palate to match. A spicy, savoury flavour undercurrent and silky tannins make it the complete red for early drinking – though the flavour intensity and layers of tannin mean good short to medium-term cellaring.

Birks Chip Dry Very Dry Fino $25 375ml
Wagga and Yanda, NSW; Barossa Valley, South Australia
Andrew Birk’s limited release Chip Dry is a superb example of Australia’s traditional fino style, modelled on Spain’s fino sherry, from Jerez. At 18.5 per cent alcohol, Birks is bigger than Spanish versions or, indeed, than modern Australian styles, like Seppeltsfield Flora Fino at 16 per cent. But for sherry lovers it’s a dry and tasty treat, made from the palomino grape and matured for many in oak under a natural bloom, or “flor” of yeast. It is indeed chip dry and fine, with sherry’s distinctive nutty flavours. It’s available through Bidgeebong Wines (winery@bidgeebong.com.au).

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 20 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Australian wine industry seeks lower alcohol wine

A growing push for lower alcohol wines comes from many directions: the anti-alcohol lobby; public health advocates; a desire to reduce costs in markets that tax wine on alcohol content; to avoid the heat and astringency of excessive alcohol; in response to certain wine critics, particularly in the United Kingdom; and to cater for some consumers favouring a less intoxicating beverage.

Australia’s peak industry body, Wine Australia, backs the move, saying on its website, “The wine industry is developing and evaluating strategies to reduce the alcohol/ethanol content of wine without compromising quality”.

It lists several ways for winemakers to bring down alcohol levels: picking grapes at lower sugar levels (lower sugar means less alcohol), removing sugar from grape juice, removing alcohol from finished wine and persuading yeasts to produce less alcohol from a given amount of sugar.

The Australian Wine Research Institute currently uses traditional breeding selection techniques to develop these yeasts. But it also genetically modifies yeasts to achieve the same results for research purposes, if not in commercial trials or production. This research, it believes, will help researchers understand what yeasts are capable of and aid traditional breeding approaches.

Wine Australia concludes, “The immediate challenge for the wine sector is to make ‘low-alcohol producing yeasts’ using traditional breeding and selection processes that are acceptable to the consumer and which can be adopted by winemakers. Considerable commercial advantage will benefit the category or country which delivers the successful outcome first”.

However, Mudgee winemaker David Lowe, an advocate of low alcohol wines, believes the industry “must have the debate now about genetically engineered yeast”. He says the AWRI’s extensive work in this area has already produced yeast capable of making 8.5 per cent alcohol wine. He believes if Australia adopts GM yeasts, “Europe may use it as a trade barrier. But Canada and the USA will most likely be OK with it”.

But winemaking consultant and former CEO of Domain Chandon Australia, Dr Tony Jordan counters with, “The day we allow genetically modified material into the winery is the day we might as well become Coca-Cola. That’s definitely the beginning of the end, it’s not terroir-based technology. I believe we need to be a bit a-technical here and wait for traditional selection techniques to come through. Some people say that if we don’t explore GM then the wine industry will be left behind – well, so be it”.

Jordan believes viticultural changes in the last twenty years account for increasing alcohol content in Australian wines. He says new canopy management techniques turned our vines into “sugar factories”. “Perhaps we should be looking for ways to reverse that and still get ripe tannins and fruit flavours”, he argues.

And that’s the conundrum for vignerons in Australia’s hot, dry climate – achieving flavour and tannin ripeness in grapes before sugar levels soar. Even so-called cool areas like Canberra struggle with this – or we did until grapes ripened at comparatively low sugar levels – meaning lower alcohol – in the cold 2011 and 2012 seasons.

Seasonal temperature variations aside, however, it should be possible, as Tony Jordan urges, to power down the sugar factories. In Margaret River, for example, Vanya Cullen’s biodynamic vineyards produced the profound Diana Madeline cabernet blend at just 12 and 13 per cent alcohol respectively in the 2009 and 2010 vintages. This is world class, fully ripe wine. But it’s significantly lower in alcohol than the 14.5 per cent or so of other top Australian cabernet sauvignons.

Whether or not all consumers can discern, or even care, about the difference is another matter. In Reducing alcohol levels in wine, an April 2012 fact sheet for winemakers and grape growers, the AWRI reported, “The link between alcohol and consumer preference varies across consumer groups. In recent studies, winemaker preference did not relate to alcohol concentration. While almost 40% of wine consumers in Australia and more than 50% of wine consumers in China reported lower levels of liking for higher alcohol wines, with reference to hotness and bitterness”.

In the same publication, the AWRI advises vignerons how to reduce alcohol – starting with viticulture, then drilling down through yeast selection, blending lower and higher alcohol components, enzyme additions, fermenter design, physical removal of sugar or alcohol and loss of alcohol by evaporation during fermentation and maturation.

While physical removal offers the biggest reductions in alcohol, it almost invariably means a significant loss of flavour. But big reductions probably appeal to a small minority of drinkers, not mainstream consumers.

I suspect the main game will be shifting wines down a couple of percentage points, say moving reds from 14 to 15 per cent to 12 or 13 per cent in cooler areas, a tad higher in hotter regions – levels that may be achievable largely in the vineyard. The caveat, as Canberra’s two recent cold vintages indicate, is that we can’t totally overcome seasonal variations.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 20 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Beer historian takes aim at Dan Murphy

On June 4 in Australian brews news, beer historian, Dr Brett Stubbs, took Woolworths-owned retailer Dan Murphy to task over errors in its new booklet, Beer styles: The beers, the brewers and the breweries.

Dr Stubbs welcomes Dan Murphy’s attempt to educate beer drinkers, but finds the book riddled with careless mistakes.

These include placing Captain Cook at the head of the first fleet in 1788 and asserting the fleet carried two of the colony’s earliest brewers – James Squire and John Boston. In fact, says Stubbs, only Squire arrived with Governor Phillip’s fleet.

Other inaccuracies, says Stubbs, include the founding date of Cascade Brewery (1824 according to the brewery; 1832 says Stubbs) and crediting Matilda Bay as Australia’s first post-war brewery, in face of contrary evidence.

In effect”, concludes Stubbs, “it is an uncritical compilation of self-serving and adulatory corporate vignettes, dressed up to look like ‘information’”.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 20 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Beer review — Sierra Nevada and Bridge Road

Sierra Nevada Kellerweis Hefeweizen 355ml $4.50
This is an exciting American expression of Bavaria’s wheat ale style: a glowing, pale lemon colour, suffused with a yeast haze; an abundant, dense, white head; a sweet, enticing banana-like aroma; and a zingy, lemon-fresh palate, with hints of banana and clove and a delicious, dry, refreshing finish.

Bridge Road Brewers Hefeweizen 330ml $4.50
Ben Kraus offers another interpretation of the Bavarian wheat ale style: medium amber-gold colour; an aroma of sweet malt, tinged with banana-like esters; a full, smooth, creamy-textured palate; and a fresh, dry finish, with a spicy aftertaste. It lacked the vibrance of Sierra Nevada. We suspect the retail stock may not have been fresh.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 20 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review — Tapanappa, Lowe and Gipsie Jack

Tapanappa Tiers Vineyard Piccadilly Valley Chardonnay 2010 $80
Tapanappa Foggy Hill Vineyard Fleurieu Peninsula Pinot Noir 2010 $50

In 2001 Lion Nathan acquired Petaluma (founded in 1976 by Brian Croser). But Croser retained control of the Tiers vineyard, a key source of Petaluma chardonnay. The wine lives on under the Tapanappa label, a joint venture of the Croser family and French families behind Chateau Lynch-Bages and Bollinger Champagne. The finely structured wine delivers juicy, full, ripe-peach varietal flavours, combined with the nutty, spicy characters of fermentation and maturation in oak barrels. I rate Tapanappa’s ripe, fine-boned 2010 pinot noir as the best yet from this new vineyard, planted by Croser in 2003 – inspired by the very cool maritime climate.

Lowe Mudgee Tinja Preservative-free White 2012 $20
Tinja 2012 preservative-free white joins its sulphur-free merlot cellar mate, first released five years ago by Mudgee vigneron David Lowe. The new wine is a blend of verdelho and chardonnay, grown on an organic-in-conversion vineyard, 650 metres above sea level, at Rylstone, within the Mudgee wine region. It’s a fresh, fruity dry white, with quite a firm, savoury dry finish – quite an achievement considering how difficult it is to make sound wine without the protection of sulphur dioxide. The wine’s also low in alcohol, weighing in at just 10 per cent.

Gipsie Jack Langhorne Creek “The Terrier” Shiraz Cabernet 2007 $15–$17
Winemaker John Glaetzer’s ties with Langhorne Creek (near Lake Alexandrina) stretch back to the 1960s and his days with Wolf Blass and the creation of the famous grey and black label reds. The area has been called “Australia’s middle palate” – a salute to the generous, rounded flavours of its reds wine so loved by big-company blenders. But in this collaboration between Glaetzer and Ben Potts, Langhorne’s unblended richness stands on its own – a big, warm, friendly wine with a couple of years’ bottle age. Ripe, earthy shiraz leads the flavour, but cabernet’s backbone and distinctive eucalypt notes make an appearance, too.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 17 June 2012 in The Canberra Times

Wine review– Lerida Estate, Lowe and Swinging Bridge

Lerida Estate Shiraz Viognier 2009 – $65
Lerida Estate vineyard, Lake George, Canberra District, NSW
Inspired largely by Dr Edgar Riek’s pinot noir, Jim Lumbers and Anne Caine established Lerida Estate in 2000, next door to Riek’s Lake George vineyard (acquired by the Karelas family in 1998). However, in a run of warm vintages in the new century (until 2011, that is) shiraz generally outperformed pinot – hitting an impressive peak in 2009. Its awards, to date, include gold medals in the Canberra Regional, National, Winewise Small Vignerons, NSW Small Winemakers and Sydney International shows. And it takes only one glass to side with the judges. It’s a thrilling wine – fragrant, juicy, fruity and seasoned with cool climate spiciness. Despite its 14.9 alcohol, Lerida remains elegant, medium bodied and seductive now. But it tastes so young, so fresh and so vibrant it’ll probably age well for many years.

Lowe Reserve Zinfandel 2009 $75
Lowe Vineyard, Mudgee, NSW
In 1995, with the aid of California’s Ridge Vineyards (Lytton Springs), David Lowe planted zinfandel at Mudgee – the connection being the hard, quartz and shale soils of these two former gold-mining regions. The vines took well in Mudgee, as they had in California 150 years earlier. But, says Lowe, they’re prolific, growing like crazy even in hard soils. In a typical season he harvests just one tonne to the hectare, leaving double that amount on the ground. In a recent tasting of the 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2009 vintages, the 2006 and 2009 in particular impressed – the 2006 for refinement and elegance; the 2009 for generosity and fine-boned structure.

Lowe Tinja Organic Preservative-free Merlot 2012 $20
Lowe vineyard, Mudgee, NSW
This is David Lowe’s fifth Tinja preservative-free merlot – targeted, he says at young people and people allergic to sulphur dioxide, the preservative used in almost every wine on the market. It’s a not easy capturing and preserving vibrant fruit flavours without sulphur. But Lowe’s latest vintage does just that: the colour’s limpid and vibrant and the aroma and flavour are all about pure, fresh fruitiness. Lively acidity and firm tannins help preserve the fruit. It’s like Beaujolais with balls, and ready to enjoy now.

Swinging Bridge Chardonnay 2010 $16–$20
Canowindra, Central Ranges, NSW
On a visit to Canberra in late May, winemaker Tom Ward showed five vintages of his Canowindra chardonnay. They’re terrific wines and a reminder that the Cowra–Canowindra area has a long history of making very good chardonnay at comparatively low prices. While the 2010 reveals a tightening of the style, it shares delicious underlying peaches and melon varietal flavour with the older, slightly bigger wines. The older vintages, especially the 2007, all continue to drink beautifully – especially. This reassures us that a case of the 2010 purchased now might give drinking pleasure for perhaps another decade.

Swinging Bridge Reserve Chardonnay 2011 $32–$36
Orange, NSW
Tom Ward’s reserve chardonnay comes from a chilly Orange vineyard located 900 metres above sea level. It’s only a short distance from Ward’s family vineyard at Canowindra. But the rise in elevation shifts chardonnay’s varietal flavour from plump and juicy peaches and melon to lean and grapefruit-like. To preserve this flavour, he favours cultivated yeasts over wild yeasts for the fermentation in barrels. The resulting pale-coloured wine has the body and rich texture of chardonnay cut with intense, grapefruit-like varietal flavour – in all, an elegant, refined drop to savour.

Copyright © Chris Shanahan 2012
First published 13 June 2012 in The Canberra Times